Enterprise 2.0 – Midori + SharePoint
My good friends Gene, Jess and team at nForm have finally demonstrated their awesome new project management applicaiton Midori.
Midori is built on top of Sharepoint. And uses a completely custom layout engine.
Part of Midori is an engine that gives us complete control over SharePoint's interface and interactions. We're still refining the interface, but we're able to make Midori look and work like just about any other web app (including standards-compliant mark-up and a bunch of ajax-y interactions).
The thing that blows me away is:
While we haven't made it completely cross-browser compatible, I use it regularly from my Mac without trouble.
I don’t use my Mac for accessing many of the internal Microsoft SharePoint sites, mostly because the experience on Firefox 3 is unspectacular. But having built a truly cross-platform layout engine for SharePoint is a powerful tool. I wonder if they would consider licensing it to third-party SharePoint developers.That’s a different question.
Why SharePoint?
Gene suspects ‘we'll even answer that nagging question "why SharePoint?"’. I have a few suspicisions including:
- “By the end of 2010, at least 30% of North American enterprises with 15,000 or fewer employees will deploy MOSS 2007 as an enterprisewide intranet or B2E portal.” – David Gootzit, April 22, 2008 – Gartner
- “Approximately 50% of midsize businesses tell us that they are using Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 (MOSS) and/or Windows SharePoint Services (WSS).” – James A. Browning & Karen M. Shegda, March 4, 2008 – Gartner
With companies like Atlassian shipping the SharePoint Connector for Confluence and NewsGator releasing Social Sites and SharePoint and SocialText’s SocialPoint (comments from Don Dodge), there is an ecosystem of products forming to help fill the gaps in SharePoint. It’s a product that is easy for IT departments to acquire, install and deploy. There are challenges (opportunities man, opportunities) for companies in deployment with the user experience and configuration options. But I could see companies like nForm, ThoughtFarmer and others building functional, usable, pleasurable user experiences on-top as a solution for the grow market space.
Don summaries some of Ross Mayfield’s , CEO of SocialText, interesting points about building on the Microsoft platform.
- The "humanizing" of Microsoft has changed his mind about working with Microsoft. He cites Ray Ozzie, Robert Scoble, Channel9 and blogs from Microsoft employees as examples.
- SharePoint 2007 is a market leader, validates the category, and grows the market for everyone.
- The short term value (role) for a wiki that supports SharePoint is immediately apparent.
- SocialText has a profit motive, balanced by freedom, that will sell more seats of SocialText and SharePoint. Everyone wins.
- SocialText customers told him this was a good idea. You can't lose when you listen to your customers.
I’ve spent the past year trying to balance my desire to build profit driven companies with the freedom of the open idea. But for companies like nForm, partnering with Microsoft is a great way to leverage a successful sales and marketing engine that can help you sell more software.
Plus nForm is hiring:
Resources
- Cameron Moll’s Skinning MS SharePoint with Standards
- Accessibility Kit for SharePoint
- SharePoint meets Web Standards
Comments
Anonymous
June 07, 2008
This is awesome news. Would love to hear about more companies that are extended SharePoint.Anonymous
June 09, 2008
David, thanks for the kind words. We're also quite excited about the MS Project integration and team support. We hope to have a downloadable Midori demo available in about a month if you're interested in playing with it.